Management & Organization professor James O'Rourke IV was interviewed for a Marketplace story on why Uber and Lyft are offering free or discounted rides to the polls on election day. He argues it's a move to gain new riders.

“Particularly if you’re an older customer or someone in an underserved area, it’s a great way to introduce someone to the service,” he said.

Finance professor Robert Battalio was quoted in an opinion piece published in Financial Times about Robinhood Securities, a venture-funded, mobile-only platform for trading shares and cryptocurrencies.

Lead author Charlice Hurst, an assistant professor of management in Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business, said that this is harmful in the long run because it could enable people who are likely to "perpetuate abusive cultures."

Martijn Cremer's presentation on a new paper he co-authored, "Challenging the Conventional Wisdom on Active Management: A Review of the Past 20 Years of Academic Literature on Actively Managed Mutual Funds," was covered by Ignites, a Financial Times service. Cremers is interim dean and the Bernard J. Hank Professor of Finance at Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business. Read the story here.…

In a MarketWatch story, management professor Tim Hubbard weighed in on General Electric's stock price jump Monday morning following news that GE had ousted John Flannery as CEO and named Larry Culp as his successor.…

A study co-authored by finance professor and interim dean of the Mendoza College of Business Martijn Cremers found that "the conventional wisdom is too negative on the value of active management." The research was highlighted in a story that appeared in Financial Advisor…

A Bloomberg Law piece on former SEC associate counsel Richard Levine joining Labaton Sucharow as a partner in the firm’s whistleblower representation practice referenced a 2015 survey the firm did with Mendoza College of Business.…

Finance professor Paul Gao's forthcoming study, which indicates that racial discrimination may be the reason historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) pay higher fees to issue tax-exempt bonds than non-HBCUs, was featured in The Atlantic.